Although nothing can ever disappear from the Internet, she said that once the photo has been pushed past 10 pages on a search engine, most people aren't going to see it. The Central Florida Future was unable to confirm whether the images were submissions or obtained through unethical methods, but conversations on Twitter have shown that at least one individual willingly submitted to the ucfnudes Snapchat. Check out this story on centralfloridafuture. Men fatally stab former roommate over stolen PlayStation, deputies say News. Freshman Julie Taylor said she believed people weren't thinking about the repercussions. A link has been posted to your Facebook feed. On the flipside, Christey Oberbeck, an advocate at UCF Victim Services, says if your photos have already been published on the Web without your consent, do not Google your name, because it will continue to appear at the top of search-engine results. This can include media that was taken with consent. In a lawsuit filed Thursday, Kathryn Novak says she discovered in March, a month after splitting from her long-distance boyfriend of five months, that he'd shared sexual images and videos of her in the group without her permission.